Doc: How they feel to you is not the relevant measure. I judge objectively the way they respond to stimuli, and they are much fucking improved. In the overall, Sir, I call you a miracle.

(Al rings the bell, still in his office. Downstairs, Dan and Johnny are busy at the bar, they look up at the sound of the bell. The door to his office opens and Doc steps out... )

Doc: Ready to meet the world. (Johnny smiles)

(Outside the Bella Union, Cy and Wolcott talking)

Cy: How much longer you suppose I'll be buying claims, Mr. Wolcott?

Wolcott: We're close to the end.

Cy: Otherwise, I'll need to start dancin' out here in long johns or bayin' at the moon—give people some idea of why I'm going against logic.

Wolcott: This phase is nearly over, even as another begins. (He gestures toward a wagon arriving with a large tarp covering it's contents.)

(Alma's room at the Grand Central, she is seated next to Ellsworth, sipping tea, across from Sol Star... )

Alma: I propose formation of a bank, Mr. Star, with yourself as Chief Officer, my holdings in the camp standing surety, and Mr. Ellsworth as overseer of my interests.

Sol: I see.

Alma:(looks at Ellsworth) Not quite a rousing endorsement.

Sol: It's just what's needed, Mrs. Garret. I don't know that I should be part of it.

Alma: Why, Mr. Star?

Sol: Other obligations.

Alma: Oughtn't you, or anyone urging such connections as disqualifying you, think of the good of the camp? We all have... (pauses, appears nervous) complicating obligations. (Alma jumps up and goes to a basin to puke, Ellsworth and Sol exchange looks)

(The covered wagon has stopped in Chink's Alley, Mr. Wu grabs a knife, looks over at Mr. Lee and his henchman that drove the wagon, disgusted, he starts cutting away the tarp covering the contents of the wagon... )

Wu: Daio! (Chinese whores reach out desperately through the cages they are being held in, squinting at the sunlight.)

Wolcott: There's a combat in prospect between those two, (Mr. Wu looks back again, distressed and disgusted.) As equal as the Sioux with the whites.

(Mr. Wu glares at Mr. Lee, turns and walks away. Mr. Lee and second approach the wagon as Doc passes by — looking at the women reaching, gasping, and straining inside the cage. Doc looks over at Cy with disgust, Cy smiles)

(Al's office, he's dressed and sitting at his desk, straightening himself up)

Cy: No, Sir. Wouldn't have 'em. I am attuned, though, to the workings of what passes for their minds. This morning we see the result—more claims offered for sale and prices pressed downward. You suppose the owners fear you might visit your ire on their titles?

Hugo: I want to get out of here.

Cy: I understand. (He looks over at Tess and another whore, lounging... ) Will you have a quick wind of your timepiece before you go?

Merrick:(Excitedly) I thought so! I—uh, I hoped so. I'm delighted to make your acquaintance, Ma'am. (Hugo holds her hand bag out the coach window) And-and for the camp's children, whom you will edify. (Hugo shakes the bag at Merrick — Merrick takes it.) Uh... is this yours?

Mary: Yes.

Merrick: And your bags, your bags. Let's see, are they up here?

(Trixie leaves Al's office, E.B. & Tom Nuttall looking up. She smiles at Johnny, strolls over to E.B., imitates a blow job with her hand. She leans over in front of E.B... )

Trixie: Liar.

(Silas and Mr. Wu watch her walk past, E.B. gets up to enter Al's office. Downstairs, Ellsworth is looking around as Trixie walks down the stairs.)

Ellsworth: Miss Trixie.

Trixie: What is this now?

Ellsworth: Nothing nefarious. I was looking for you. My nerves have had a shock.

Trixie: How so?

Ellsworth: Miz Garret took poorly.

Trixie: At the meetin' with Mr. Star?

Ellsworth:(nods) Blech. (Pretends to puke)

Trixie: Hmm... (Whispering) Come here.

(She pulls on his lapel, turning him around, leading him to a back room. A whore is passed out on the couch, Trixie pries a whiskey bottle from the whore's hand. She wipes it off and takes a drink.)

Ellsworth: I'll add that... she hasn't looked well the last few weeks, especially in the morning. Pale.

Trixie: What are you fucking hintin' at? (Hands him the bottle)

Ellsworth: Nothin'.

Trixie: Nothin'? She ain't looked well mornin's opposed to the rest of the day, pale? (They sit)

Ellsworth: How does sharing observations make me liable to rebuke?

Trixie: You got her knocked up, in other words.

Ellsworth: Me?! I ain't got her in any way at all, Trixie.

Trixie: In your opinion, I'm saying — she's in the way.

Ellsworth: I work for the woman in her fucking employ. (Takes a drink)

Trixie: I understand that.

Ellsworth: And that is the sole fucking full extent of it.

Trixie: Would you do the right thing?

Ellsworth:I was not involved.

Trixie: We're fuckin' past that. I know you wasn't fuckin' involved.

Ellsworth: Who was involved too, (drinks) far as that fuckin' goes?

Trixie: Would you?

Ellsworth: Would I fuckin' what?

Trixie: Do the right fuckin' thing in that fuckin' situation?

Ellsworth:What's the situation? Explain it.

Trixie: If she wanted the child—how a woman wants one that ain't certain she's made to bear many, willin' even to bear it outta wedlock but for the hurt she'd do another and the humiliation she'd do, and to that other woman's little boy. Would you do it then?

Ellsworth:(incredulous) Do?

Trixie: The right fuckin' thing. Don't get fuckin' coy with me.

Ellsworth: Marry her, you're sayin'? (Trixie nods) And the child in the eyes of others—the issue of my loins.

Trixie: As much as they care to see. This is only a passin' glance. So the come's true author ain't thrown in their fuckin' face. Or the true author's wife's face, or the face of that little fuckin' boy. Well?

Ellsworth:(pausing) Would—would she fuckin' have me?

Trixie: I'd work on that next.

(Merrick is helping Mary Stokes with her luggage, unloading a heavy trunk from the stage.)

Mary: Books.

Merrick: Ah, wonderful.

Mary: I parted with several boxes in Bismarck.

Merrick:(struggling with the trunk) I'm sure to Bismarck's betterment.

Mary: Mostly for the sake of the children.

Merrick: The other few, might I suspect for the sake of certain childhood memories of your own?

Mary: You may, and be in the right.

Merrick: Uh, when-when you're situated, Miss Stokes, (stammering) may I take you on a tour of the camp?

Mary: I would be grateful.

Merrick: No more than I, Miss Stokes, I assure you.

(Al's office, EB is up)

EB: Oh, a man's come to camp, Wolcott. Agent for the Hearst's interest. (He gets up, puts on his hat — he's nervous) I believe he's made calls with Tolliver and Yankton.

Al: That's why Yankton's suddenly got balls.

EB: I made him think I was trying to gull him, (sits) and that he had turned the tables on me.

Al: How much did he buy you for?

EB: I kept Dan apprised while you convalesced, in abbreviated fashion.

Al: How much.

EB: Oh, $10,000. (He stands back up, biting his nail, pacing, not able to look Al in the eye.) Enlisting me, so he thought, to spread rumors about rescission of the claims.

Al: Tolliver's the front, hmm?

EB:(nods) Buying from the panicked sellers, engaged by this Wolcott.

Al: This agent for George Hearst?

EB: That's it in a nutshell. (He sits, chuckles, looks at Al — who is staring thoughtfully at him. E.B — uncomfortable — stands back up) I meant you no disloyalty, Al.

Al: You looked out for yourself against the chance I'd die.

EB: I never wished for that outcome. But I am a born follower. In any case, here we are, if tactically disadvantaged, exactly as before in strength. (Makes a "huzzah" with is arms, moves to leave, Al rings the bell, E.B. turns back to Al, shutting the door, nervous. Al waves him off.) Oh, sure. Thank you, Sir.

(Hardware store, Seth looks out the door and smiles, walking to the desk. Sol enters.)

Sol: Morning.

Seth: Morning, Sol.

Sol:(Hangs up his hat, removes his coat) Thanks for opening.

Seth: You were out.

Sol:(Pauses — turns) Yes. Yes, I paid a call and then I've been walking. (Pauses — apprehensive) The call was on Mrs. Garret.

Seth: We agreed — that wasn't gonna happen.

Sol: Our agreement was to not solicit her investment in a bank. The call I paid was at her invitation.

Seth:(Angry — walks out from behind the desk, approaching Sol) I don't give a fuck who invited who, Sol.

Sol: That's your position.

Seth: Was the bank the subject of the meeting? (A customer walks in) Get out! (The customer stops, turns, leaving)

Sol:(To the customer ) Uh, excuse us a little while, please. (Turns back to Seth) She invited me, Seth.

Cy: And as far as locales for fucking, them cribs they're in lack allure.

Wolcott: They might attract the intended clientele.

Cy: Now that's an attitude right there I want us to counsel on. Smart-alecky sorta attitude and almost with a quality of... fucking anger to it. I-I-I don't find exact fucking words for it, but it fucking disturbs and concerns me.

Cy: Well, I should think you fucking would be. And to think of Mr. Hearst's disturbance if he was to fucking know. Because... that's a dangerous habit to indulge when you're not among friends.

Wolcott: Are you my friend, Mr. Tolliver?

Cy:(laughst) And as someone past surprise at habits or inclination, or turns of events, and who don't confuse himself far as sitting in judgment with our Lord in fucking heaven.

Wolcott: I see.

Cy: And who would never tattle to your employer or jeopardize what's gotta be a handsome fucking income. Goddamn right, I am your friend, Mr. Wolcott. All I can't provide for the party is the cliff.

Wolcott: Believing yourself past surprise does not commend you to me as a friend.http://deadwoodchronicles.com/protect/audio/DW-S2/Ep18-believing_yourself_past_surprise.mp3 A man inadequately sophisticated, or merely ignorant or simply stupid, may believe himself past surprise, then be surprised to discover, for example, that Mr. Hearst already knows of my inclinations and finds them immaterial. Suggesting, as a corollary, that your skills for blackmail and manipulation no longer are assets to you, and for your fatuous belief in their efficacy, in fact have become liabilities. In short, you've overplayed your hand. Now I should think in consequence, now recognizing yourself as a man past his time, that during this last transitional period you would devote yourself with grateful and quiet diligence to such uses as others may still find you suitable.

Cy: Oh, you bet I'm grateful. A man like yourself, warmed at Mr. Hearst's bosom, secure in his confidence and trust, taking the time and spending the energy to persuade a relic like me.

(Wolcott gets up, pushes in his chair, takes the claim papers and leaves, slamming the door. Cy takes the cash and puts it in his pocket.)

(Silas' room, he and Miss I are relaxing in bed)

Alice: She'd placed adverts for a tutor in Chicago, Boston and New York. The interests that employ me saw.

Silas: What was you doing at the time?

Alice: Piloting a steamboat.

Silas: Was Al right who hired you people to fuck her up?

Alice: That's not something I'm told.

Silas: Must be the dead husband's parents if they want to hang that murder off her neck.

Alice: That would make sense. (pauses) Why does Swearengen hate the Pinkertons?

Silas: Beats me, a stalwart organization like 'at. (pause) Did you help send them miners up the fucking scaffold in Pennsylvania?

Alice:(indifferent) I was busy on the Mississip'.

(Silas looks sideways at Alice, eyebrows raised)

(Wolcott is walking the thoroughfare... talking to himself, we see his anger increase the farther he walks)

Mary:(chuckling) Yes. And to take that extra moment in turn. (Merrick takes her hand, guiding her through the muck)

Merrick: Oh, Miss Stokes, to alter a life's course with a word—(he gazes upon her) how I revere your... your profession.

Mary: Well, thank you, Mr. Merrick.

Merrick: No, thank you, Miss Stokes, and all teachers in you. (Pausing —releasing her hand - looking ahead) Um, there before you is the Bullock house. It was recently constructed by Mr. Bullock. (groans) Ah, these streets. (He guides her through the muck.)

(Al's office, Wu is up. He and Al are studying one of Wu's drawings.It's a drawing of the San Francisco cocksucker)

Cy: Good. Now, how about, "Referee's the only neutral in a prize fight, Merrick, and you ain't one of those."

Con:(Mulls this over) We could say that.

Leon: What would we mean?

Cy: Tch. I don't know, fellas. I do not fucking know.

Con: Well, if you don't, we don't have to either.

Cy: I am saying, far as I'm concerned, your initiative and leadership abilities and stick-fucking-to-itiveness are all in fucking question. And, was I either or both of you, I'd consider this a fucking test.

Leon: When do you suppose he'll show up?

Con: Once we've paid a visit to his place, Leon.

Leon: Oh! (As in "No shit, Sherlock.")

Con: And aftermath, when Merrick's path crosses ours, he'll here of the "neutral" and the "prize fight." (Con looks to Cy, Cy smiles.)

Leon: In no uncertain terms.

Con: And know the import of that fucking parable.

Cy: All right then.

Leon: Got any sledgehammers?

Cy:(chuckling) Always. (They drink)

(Chez Amie, Joanie and Maddie are sitting, nervous.)

Joanie: I'm going in there.

Maddie: No, you aren't.

Joanie: He ain't the type to be with two women.

Maddie: I never took his full history.

Joanie: I'm saying he ain't!

(Inside the room, we see Carrie sitting, crying and clearly frightened. Wolcott is behind her.)

Wolcott: What are we to do here, Carrie?

Carrie: Get rid of her. (We see Doris on the bed with her throat slashed, dead.) They'll let you.

Wolcott: I suppose they will, but that won't dispose of the problem.

Carrie: What's the problem?

Wolcott: I don't know. I can't say. I don't want you to have seen me.

Carrie: I don't care you killed her. She must have done something to you.

Wolcott: I mean something different. I don't want to have been seen.

Carrie:(long pause, she's crying, nose running) Then you're fucking crazy. (pause) And you're gonna kill me in this fucking shithole. (Wolcott puts his arm out, resting it on a chair behind her, we see the flash of his razor. Carrie is resigned, gazing at the bloody Doris.) Do you know how to make it not hurt?

(He pauses, seems touched by the remark, we see the glint of the blade behind Carrie. She jumps up to bolt out of the room He catches her, putting a hand over her mouth and slitting her throat with the other. He guides her down into a chair with him, gazing at her face — we hear him emit a low groan.)

Wolcott: Now, I could cut off my arm. (He lifts her head gently and takes his arm out from under it. He kisses her forehead. Sitting alone, he fingers his razor.)

(Back to the outer room)

Joanie: I'm going in. (She walks to her desk, Maddie pulls out a gun, stands, pointing it at Joanie.)

Maddie: Your gun isn't there! (gasps) I've got it. (Joanie silently walks away from the desk, making her way to the front door, looking back at the closed bedroom door, back to Maddie) Go on, get out!

(Joanie leaves. Maddie — trembling & sobbing, lowers the gun. Joanie is walking down the street, sobbing.. Charlie spots her and tips his hat to her.)

Maddie:(Stands, suddenly pointing the gun at him.) 100,000. For now. (Advancing) And more when I want it for as many years as I live! For all the years of my life. Do you understand!? (She has the gun in his face now, waving it. He grabs the gun hand, and in a single fluid move with the other hand he slashes her neck She gasps for air as he eases her — still holding her hand — to the floor. He sits, looking at Maddie as the blood pours out of her.)

(Joanie has arrived at the Bella Union and approaches Cy.)

Joanie: There's trouble at my place, Cy.

Cy:(He turns to face her smiling) Where is Sheriff Bullock when he's needed?

Joanie: Her last report to you, did Doris speak of gettin' beat on? (He stares) That's the man making the trouble.

Joanie:(Turns to the bartender, Lila comes up behind her.) How much money you got, Jack?

Jack: Don't put me in the fucking middle, Joanie.

Joanie: No, I wouldn't!

Jack: 1400.

Joanie:(turns to Lila) Can you run to Mr. Utter? Lila — tell him to ready a wagon.

Lila: Sure, Joanie. (She leaves.)

Joanie: (Turns back to Jack) Go get your fucking money, Jack!

(Jack leaves the bar, Joanie is by herself, quietly crying.)

(Mr Lee is in Al's office. Dan tosses a large bag of gold dust onto the desk in front of Lee. Lee looks calmly at Al and shakes his head "no")

Al: Again. (Dan grabs another sack from the safe and sets it next to the other. Lee looks amused.) Open the fucking bag for him, verify it's fucking gold. (Dan reaches for the sack.)

MrLee: I know. I don't want it.

Al:(looks surprised) Anyways, good meetin' ya.

(Mr. Lee turns and leaves without another word. Dan closes the door behind him and nods to the bedroom door, Al nods. Dan opens the door where Wu has been hiding.)

Dan: Come on out, Wu.

MrWu:(Walks over to Al's desk) Juice? (Rubs his fingers together. He nods to the door that Lee just left through.)

Al: If 20 don't get tempt him to converse, you're fucking-a-right. Maybe you and me should be working for him.

MrWu: Wu (one finger) Swedgin (another finger, he crosses them)

Al: Alright, Wu, it's been a long fucking day, huh?

Wu: No San Francisco cocksucker.

Dan: Come on, Wu. Al's tired.

(Mr. Wu leaves, Al pulls out a shot glass and pours himself some whiskey. Dan puts the gold sacks back in the safe.)

Al: Hearst.

Dan: What about him?

Al: San Francisco.

Dan: You think Hearst and the chink's connected?

Al: You think he was born--lookin' down his nose at 20,000?

( Chez Amie, Cy is looking over the bloody room and the 2 dead whores, he gags a little and turns to Wolcott who is still sitting next to Maddie's body)

Cy: The chief fact is, no witnesses are extant.

Wolcott: The other madam was here — once when I came out. Uh, Joanie Stubbs.

Cy: Before you did this? (Waves the handkerchief, motioning to Maddie's body)

Wolcott: Yes. When I came back out, she was gone.

Cy: Was she ever in the bedroom?

Wolcott: No.

(Cy tucks the handkerchief in his coat pocket, pulls up a chair, sitting backwards in it , facing Wolcott.)

Cy: Don't worry about the other madam. Go to the hotel. Eat, if you can stand the food. (Wolcott looks at Cy.) This will all be took care of. I told you, Mr. Wolcott, all's I can't provide is the cliff. (Wolcott looks down.) Go on now, get outta here.

(Cy looks down at Maddie.)

(Hardware store, Seth stands in front of Sol.)

Seth: I apologize for bringing Trixie into it, and calling her what I did.

Sol: That wasn't new information to me.

Seth:(Smiles a bit) After you and me talked, I searched that idiot Steve out to rebuke him and smack him in the face for being who he was. (taps his head) The Sheriff. (Sol nods) Tell me about your meetin' with Mrs. Garret.

Sol: She never once mentioned your name. She wants to form the bank to better the camp.

Seth: And asked you to be involved?

Sol: To serve as Chief Officer.

Seth: You'd be a good one. (Smiles)

Sol: I got the impression that she might be with child.

(Seth stares at Sol, clenched)

(Evening, Merrick is escorting the schoolteacher across the street into his office)

Merrick: Lot, before God, could make no case for that food.

Mary: Lot's wife may have been in that food.

Merrick: Over salted as it was.

Mary: Mm-hmm.

Merrick:(laughs) I took that to be your meaning.

(He opens the door, his jaw drops as he sees that his shop has been ransacked. She covers her face with a handkerchief and backs out of the office)

(The livery, Hostetler is dozing on a stool and is awaken by a sound. He looks around and sees Steve standing behind Bullock's horse. He grabs a shovel and starts to sneak up behind Steve.)

Steve: Aw, shit. (grunts) Stay still, God damn it... while I come on your fucking leg. You're lucky I'm not fucking you. (groaning) Ooh! (He sighs, pats the horses' haunch, a smile on his face.) You tell the Sheriff how that fucking felt, me coming on your fucking leg... or that I saved you from an ass fucking.

Merrick: My press has been damaged, my vowel tray beyond repair. And the newly arrived school teacher, Miss Stokes, has been badly frightened and has retreated to her hotel. (Gestures across the street, Cy turns and looks.)

Cy: Do we blame unsavory elements?

Merrick: I regard this incident as postscript to the visit by county Commissioner Jarry.

Cy: Interesting.

Merrick: Retribution for my refusal to associate my newspaper with Yankton's notice on title to the claims.

Cy: For pinning the notice, you mean, on a wall instead of printing it under your masthead?

Merrick: That is my meaning exactly. Disassociating "The Deadwood Pioneer" from what I took to be the opposite of an effort to inform.

Cy: Maybe if you had done your part, calmed the fucking waters a little, instead of treeing the county commissioner, the hooples would have gone and got their loads on and been waiting for your next edition.

Merrick: No, we-we differ, Mr. Tolliver, on the function of the press.

Cy: Ain't the lesson for you in this, Merrick, that with fucked up machinery, the press cannot function at all?

Merrick: And is that the vandalism's purpose, Sir? And of the dog defecating in my office, with ruffians dispatched by you as the lesson's author?

Cy: I doubt they had a dog with 'em.

(Cy leaves, Merrick is agape.)

(At the livery, Hostetler is sitting on a stool across from Steve, who is securely tied to an anvil)

Fields:(entering) Hostetler, what the hell are you doing? (Sits)

Hostetler: He was in here fucking a horse.

Steve: I did not fuck that horse.

Fields: I'm asking you what you're doing.

Hostetler: I'm gonna go get a shoeing tool, and I'm gonna hit this bastard right here, (touching the center of his forehead) and I'm gonna drop him like a piece of beef.

Steve: I never fucking harmed you.

Fields: Guess he ain't talking to me.

Steve: I didn't kill you like he's fucking fixing to kill me.

Hostetler: You need to die, Steve.

Fields: Hard as you worked, (carries over the chalkboard) as much shit as you had to eat, only way it makes any sense to kill him is if you sign everything you got across to me first. 'Cause then I could see the logic.

Al: You go. (nodding at Dan, grabs Johnny) I want you close. I think I'll take a look outside. (Uses his grip on Johnny's arm to hoist himself to standing. Dan goes to his other side and the three make their way to the balcony.) What about that forest fucking type you used to maraud with before you met me?

Dan: Crop ear?

Al: Yeah, lacked the used of a fucking horn. (pokes his finger in Johnny's ear)

Al: Uh, let's not appear as fucking triplets, huh? (Johnny takes Al's arm off his shoulder, Al hops out onto the balcony, leaning against the doorframe... ) Go back down, both of you. (They leave, Al situates himself and hops to the balcony railing and addresses his leg.) Took some fucking portion of the relative fucking weight.

(In the street, Joanie is helping 3 whores into a wagon that's covered by a tarp.)

Joanie:(whispers) Come on, come on.

(They all climb under the tarp, Charlie holds it up for them. Charlie shoos away a nosey passer-by. Joanie is at the side of the wagon, her back to it)

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